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An Occasional Letter from the Collection Agency
Who's that knocking on the door? Who's that ringing the Bell?
It's time for another visit by your friendly Collection Agency to offer timely
advice and to remind you of his previous excellent record. You should all know
by now that the Collection Agency doesn't pull any punches and has ensured
that subscribers have been well ahead of developments in the global macro economy.
It has been interesting to read current econo-blogging and main stream writing
discussing the present situation, something subscribers old and new must read
with a feeling of déjà vu as the memory of articles and letters
written up to 3 years ago came flooding back to the fore. Prior to starting
my subscription only service I had a blog. The blog is
still available to view as an archive and whilst I didn't get a 100% predictive
score, I think 99% is not a bad hit rate.
You don't believe me? Why would I lie to you about a free archive that had
articles from 2006 through to mid 2008? The link above will take you to the
last article on the blog, it was a summation of the calls since the blog started,
with a running commentary written in July 2008. Advert over.
So here we are living with the fallout of a credit collapse, with deflation
looming for some and embedded for others. Yet right now we are getting numerous
articles looking for those famed "green shoots of recovery". I see nothing
but a parched desert. Central Banks are moving into a global Quantitative Easing
(QE), Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) environment as each individual economy
adopts the measures tried by Japan in the lost 20 years (the lost decade is
too short to describe what Japan is suffering). Even the original trialist
has returned to the experiment with the Bank of Japan purchasing bonds, shares
and debt to increase liquidity, this after the original attempt failed. Now
China has joined the QE Club, along with the US, UK and Switzerland as it stokes
the domestic credit bubble to expand liquidity through loans. We all know how
that's going to end. Even the Eurozone has adopted some of the measures of
a QE / ZIRP plan, it will become a full member soon enough.
I read a lot, I mean a lot of economic material ranging from papers prepared
for Central Banks, IMF, BIS through to bloggers like me. Some of the information
I see is too optimistic or just plain wrong, some is insightful and revealing.
However there is one chart that I keep close at hand:

The chart was drawn by Martin Armstrong; it does not predict stock market
direction but business confidence.

Mr Armstrong is still writing even though he remains imprisoned. A key date
passed this week, the 19 march 2009, yet very few will know of it. The predictions
of Mr Armstrong, through his work, are truly stunning and make my work look
pale in comparison. He has pinpointed the week, the day where we see talk of
recovery becoming familiar and the confirmation of massive interference from
the State in the bond markets. More importantly Mr Armstrong noted that the
19 March is not in itself "the date" as his work pinpointed another date that
will work in conjunction with events that happened last week, that of 19 April.
(There is also another lesser cycle date for the 23 April.)
I understand the principles behind Mr A's work and as mentioned I keep it
close at hand, it is just too good to ignore. However, if you think I am going "all
in" based upon the dates you have missed the point, remember this is not a
direct market prediction. Markets reflect the sum of individual responses to
outlook, Mr A points out where the inflection points are that affect that outlook.
Those of you that have read my work on the Eggertsson
Theory written in April 2008 and titled "The future actions of the Federal
Reserve and US Govt are known" know how important expectations are in the outcome
of the massive re-flation attempt currently under way.
So what happened last week, as if you need me to tell you? The final action
needed to turn theory into fact occurred as the Federal Reserve began to put
into action the following from The
Deflation Bias and Committing to Being Irresponsible:
- "Friedman suggests that the government can always control the price level
by increasing the money supply, even in a liquidity trap. According to Friedman's
famous reductio ad absurdum argument, if the government wants to increase
the price level it can simply "drop money from helicopters." Eventually this
should increase the price level-liquidity trap or not. Bernanke (2000) revisits
this proposal and suggests that Japanese government should make "money-financed
transfers to domestic households-the real-life equivalent of that hoary thought
experiment, the "helicopter drop" of newly printed money." This analysis
supports Friedman and Bernanke's suggestions. The
analysis suggests, however, that it is the increase in government liabilities
(money & bonds), rather than the increase in the money supply that has
this effect."
"Since money and bonds are equivalent in a liquidity trap dropping money
from helicopters is exactly equivalent to issuing nominal bonds. If the
treasury and the central bank coordinate policy the effect of dropping
money from helicopters will have exactly the same effect as deficit spending.
Thus this paper's model can be interpreted as establishing a "fiscal theory" of
dropping money from helicopters. The model can also be extended to consider
the effects of the government buying foreign exchange (or any other private
assets)."
"It is often suggested that the central bank can depreciate the exchange
rate and stimulate spending by buying foreign exchange (and similar arguments
are sometimes raised about some other private assets and their corresponding
price). Due to the interest rate parity (and similar asset pricing equations
for other private assets), however, buying foreign exchange should have
no effect on the exchange rate unless it changes expectations about future
policy (since the interest rate parity says that the exchange rate should
depend on current and expected interest rate differentials)."
"Will such operations have any effect on expectations about future policy?
Open market operations in foreign exchange (or any other private asset)
would lead to a corresponding increase in public
debt defined as money plus government bonds. This gives the government
an incentive to create inflation through exactly the same channel as I
have explored in this paper and, therefore, leads to a corresponding depreciation
in the nominal exchange rate hand-in-hand with the rise in inflation expectations. An
advantage of buying private assets, as opposed to cutting taxes, is that
it does not worsen the net fiscal position of the government. It only changes
the inflation incentive of the government." GB Eggertsson. ( Emphasis mine)
As Ben Bernanke summed up on Friday (20 march) in a speech to the Independent
Community Bankers of America's National Convention and Techworld, Phoenix,
Arizona:
- "The Federal Reserve's third set of tools for supporting the credit markets
involves the purchase of longer-term securities for the Fed's portfolio.
As we announced this week, we are purchasing up to $300 billion in Treasury
debt, $200 billion of the debt of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs),
and up to $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the
GSEs and federal agencies this year. These purchases are intended to improve
conditions in private credit markets. In particular, they are helping to
reduce the interest rates that the GSEs require on the mortgages that they
purchase or securitize, thereby lowering the rate at which lenders, including
community banks, can fund new mortgages."
The Fed has underwritten the value of US Treasuries, GSE debt and MBS guaranteed
by GSEs and Federal Agencies. This is the move the Chinese were looking for,
they can now happily mark their holdings to market as they have a willing and
unlimited buyer.
However as subscribers know we are looking for those "expectations of inflation" that
are vital to change the spending and investment patterns of consumers, business
and banks.
Hello, what do we have here?

If the US Treasury Bond markets are now artificially priced then logically
the future expectations of the masses will be reflected elsewhere. At CALetters.com
we have been following yields closely to attempt to divine the range the Fed
intends to hold rates within (because we knew it would happen):




Courtesy ofwww.stockcharts.com
In last weeks Report, subscribers were reminded to watch these assets, with
the $ as the baseline:

Courtesy of www.stockcharts.com
At the risk of repeating myself, go back and re-read the highlighted part
of the last paragraph taken from GB Eggertsson's work. We now get some idea
of what it takes to inject an expectation of future inflation, around $1.75Trillion.
The big question is how long the expectation will last, will it become embedded
or will it fade away without further injections of credit and liquidity?
This is an important window for the Chinese, do they decide to wait for the
answer posed above or do they move now and sell whilst the price is supported
as the dollar loses value? We get some idea as to how worried the Chinese are
from this Reuters
article, reported on the 19 March :
-
"Russia met representatives of China, India and Brazil ahead of the G20
finance ministers meeting last week, as the big emerging powers seek to
up their influence on decisionmaking globally. Their first ever joint communique
did not mention a new currency but the source said the issue was discussed.
"They (China) did not formally put forward their position for the G20
summit but unofficially they had distributed their paper regarding the
same ideas (the need for the new currency)," the source told Reuters, speaking
on condition of anonymity.
The source said the Chinese paper envisaged the International Monetary
Fund's Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) being first assigned a role of a clearing
currency on some transactions and then gradually becoming the main global
reserve currency. "They said that the role of reserve currency should be
given to SDR," the source said.
A U.N. panel of experts is also looking at using expanded SDRs, originally
created by the International Monetary Fund in 1969, but now used mainly
as an accounting unit within similar organisations as a new reserve currency
instead of the dollar."
Again, this comes as no surprise to either subscribers or those that get to
see some of my articles for free, the following quote is from an article written
in October 2008 called "What's
that coming over the hill, is it a monster?":
- "I expect attempts to be made to peg smaller currencies to a $/Y basket.
These 2 currencies will remain strong for the foreseeable future as long
as demand for a reduced supply exists. Eventually there will a centrally
controlled orchestrated move to develop regional currencies linked to a peg
that is not a currency, such as the IMF SDR's (special drawing rights). The
movement of currency from one region to another will be after a conversion
to "SDR" and controlled by the Bank of International Settlements."
Hence we see linked events released into the public sphere that hits the spot
but have yet to reveal the result, I suspect that will become clear in April.
Right now I am worried that many investors are looking the wrong way, that
they expect gold to rocket and bonds, the dollar and the Dow to collapse. I
am not so worried that the call may be right or wrong, just that the risk is
concentrated on a set outcome.
We can see the systemic strains appearing as Central Banks attempt to manipulate
multiple markets, we know from history that such manipulation will not work.
We have the Fed supporting the Bond market whilst the dollar is allowed to
fall, gold holding a range and the Dow showing a correlation to currency fluctuations.
These are not markets that are going to react as we "expect". The Fed truly
is "committed to being irresponsible" and the Chinese know it. Worse this knowledge
is putting real fear into the Chinese strategy, why should they hold assets
that yield single digits if the currency they are denominated in is facing
possible large double digit % devaluation? For the US there is a further conundrum,
how do you make a capped yield asset attractive if the dollar is dropping in
value? Simply put, you don't. Therefore to sell the debt to willing buyers
you need to protect the dollar and if the US Treasury is unwilling to do so,
they may well find the rest of the world does it for them, buying dollars and
selling their own currencies to protect $ priced assets. Competitive devaluation
becomes the driving force for national survival in the fight against the US
self interest.
We cannot discount the possibility that the US decides that the Fed will buy
newly issued US Treasuries, rather than the current cash for debt swap with
the Banks, ensuring that the depreciation needed to make the Eggertsson Theory
work does not become derailed.
Regardless of which way such actions would affect the global economy it could
make the Chinese (well my) idea to switch to a regulated currency market look
much more attractive. In the end it might not matter which decisions are made
because, as Mr Armstrong would say "It's just time".
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